The screen magnifies everything, even the way you are thinking.
Meaning of the quote
The screen, like a magnifying glass, makes everything look bigger and more noticable. This includes the way you are thinking and feeling when you are using the screen. The screen can make your thoughts and emotions seem more intense or obvious, even if they are not as strong in real life.
About Bela Lugosi
Bela Lugosi was a Hungarian-American actor best known for playing Count Dracula in the 1931 classic horror film. He had a long career in Hollywood, co-starring with Boris Karloff in several horror movies, but struggled with typecasting and drug addiction later in his life.
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More quotes from Bela Lugosi
Of all the roles I’ve done on the stage, I’m partial to Cyrano de Bergerac.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
Because of my language and the pantomime with which most Europeans accompany their speech, I was catalogued as a heavy.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
I look in the mirror and say to myself, Can it be you once played Romeo?
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
The role seemed to demand that I keep myself worked up to fever pitch, so I took on the actual attributes of the horrible vampire, Dracula.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
The love-bite, it is the beginning. You will be irresistible.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
I never play without my cape.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
Martyrdom was the price of enthusiasm for acting.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
It took me years to live down Dracula and convince the film producers that I would play almost any other type of role.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
It was hell to go through what I went through. I didn’t know I had so many friends. Many people gave a damn about my situation. They helped cure me.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
Circumstances made me the theatrical personality I am, which many people believe is also a part of my personal life.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
Without movie parts I was reduced to freak status. I just couldn’t stand it.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
There was no male vampire type in existence. Someone suggested an actor of the Continental School who could play any type, and mentioned me.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
I’ll be truthful. The weekly paycheck is the most important thing to me.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
My body grew hot, then cold. I tried to eat the bed sheets. My heart beat madly. Every joint in my body ached. When I took the cure they took it all away from me.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
I guess I’m pretty much of a lone wolf. I don’t say I don’t like people at all, but, to tell you the truth, I only like it then if I have a chance to look deep into their hearts and their minds.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
People, chained by monotony, afraid to think, clinging to certainties… they live like ants.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
It took several years of hard work in small roles before I attained stardom.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
Women have a predestination to suffering.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
My close-up was magnificent!
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
In making theories, always keep a window open so that you can throw one out if necessary.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
A screen actor is compensated in the knowledge that millions will see his performance at one time, where only hundreds will see it on the stage.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
In Hungary acting is a profession. In America it is a decision.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
Every actor is somewhat mad, or else he’d be a plumber or a bookkeeper or a salesman.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
When a film company is in the red they come to me. Always it is the same.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
It is women who bear the race in bloody agony. Suffering is a kind of horror. Blood is a kind of horror. Women are born with horror in their very bloodstream. It is a biological thing.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
I’d like to quit the supernatural roles and play just an interesting, down-to-earth person.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
I have never met a vampire personally, but I don’t know what might happen tomorrow.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
To portray a maniac offers a compelling challenge.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
I have lived too completely, I think. I have known every human emotion.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
You can’t make people believe in you if you play a horror part with your tongue in your cheek.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
It is women who love horror. Gloat over it. Feed on it. Are nourished by it. Shudder and cling and cry out-and come back for more.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
Actors were exploited no less by the capitalist managers than they were by the state.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
The screen magnifies everything, even the way you are thinking.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
If my accent betrayed my foreign birth, it also stamped me as an enemy, in the imagination of the producers.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
I’ll take any story if it’s good.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
I studied at the Budapest Academy of Theatrical Arts for four years and emerged with a degree.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
In the studio the director controls the actor’s every move, every inflection, every expression.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
The vampire was a complete change from the usual romantic characters I was playing, but it was a success.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
The former ruling class kept the community of actors in ignorance by means of various lies.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
The stage is near and dear to me.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
Death, the final, triumphant lover.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
I don’t have a dime left. I am dependent on my friends for food and a small old-age pension.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
The actor depends wholly on himself. He gives his performance in what, to him, seems the most effective manner.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
To win a woman, take her with you to see Dracula.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
I enjoy my work. I haven’t been an actor for 30 years without getting pleasure out of the profession.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
I’ve been using narcotics for 20 years.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
If you are not serious, people will sense it.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
I have played Dracula a thousand times on stage and I find I have become thoroughly settled in the technique of the stage and not of the screen.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)
In Hungary, acting is a career for which one fits himself as earnestly as one studies for a degree in medicine, law, or philosophy.
Hungarian-American actor (1882-1956)